CUP TO NO GOOD: Melindia LeGrand is spotted by The Post begging on Mulberry Street last summer and then doffing her nun's duds. Photo: Brigitte Stelzer

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The lying nun refuses to confess her sins.

Eight months after The Post exposed phony sister Melindia LeGrand as a fraud, the habit-wearing grifter insisted she and her fake Brooklyn church raised money for needy kids.

State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman dis agrees. He filed civil charges Friday seeking to disband the “sham” orga nization, seize its assets and make LeGrand pay restitution for allegedly pocketing all the dona tions she collected in Little Italy on behalf of orphaned children and the homeless.

“It was a couple of dimes,” she scoffed, noting that she trotted out her bad habit “maybe three times a month.”

She added: “No money went for personal use.”

Not so, says the attorney general, whose withering complaint charged that for years LeGrand begged residents, shoppers and tourists to support the “children of St. Joseph’s” and other phantom programs founded by a convicted killer rapist.

“In fact, the social programs do not exist,” said the civil suit, finding that there was no summer camp, orphanage or youth services of any kind at the family headquarters at 222 Brooklyn Ave. in Crown Heights.

“Melindia LeGrand is not a nun and St. Joseph’s is not a functioning church. [It] is simply a front for fraudulent fund-raising that is run by members of the LeGrand family, which has a notorious history of crime in Brooklyn,” court papers allege.

The suit says the two women didn’t even bother to count their handouts and simply pocketed the cash.

“They just used the money for themselves,” it says.

In documents filed with the city Human Resources Administration, LeGrand claimed she pulled in between $150 and $250 per week between January 2004 and September 2009 — about $55,000, the suit says.

Last summer, The Post watched LeGrand fill a cup with dollars while accosting donors on Mulberry Street in Little Italy, claiming to be with the Episcopalian Church and raising funds for an upstate orphanage.

At the end of her begging shift, she disrobed on the street, a cigarette dangling from her lips, pulling off her nun’s habit and cross and stuffing the costume into a plastic shopping bag. A boy who answered her door a few days later said Sister Mindy had gone to Atlantic City.